Absa introduces WhatsApp Banking – A first for SA

It was revealed that Absa clients will now be allowed to do their banking via WhatsApp.

Banking via WhatsApp will be a first for South Africa. The company launched their new brand strategy today and said that using WhatsApp will be a major part of their new tech innovative platform.

This is not WhatsApp’s first foray into banking. The tech company made a major push into banking and transactional services in May this year, with their new service called WhatsApp Pay services. The service was introduced in India only.

Private lender Kotak Mahindra Bank introduced the service on a trial basis but Absa is the first bank to launch the service fully anywhere in the world.

Absa said that the new service will be part of its “social media banking” strategy and that customers can now conduct “instant transactions” using Absa’s ChatBanking service.

The new service will be available on WhatsApp but also on Facebook Messenger and Twitter.

So what will you get?

Absa clients will be able to check their balance, pay beneficiaries and buy airtime, data and electricity easily.

How do you use WhatApp banking?

A whole new world

Barclays Africa, today also offically changed its name back to Absa, in a rebranding aimed at underlining its South African roots as Britain’s Barclays gradually retreats from Africa.

The name change comes almost a year after Barclays sold most of its controlling stake in Absa, South Africa’s third-largest lender, ending more than a century of the British bank’s involvement in Africa to focus on its home market and the United States.

“Today we celebrate an important milestone in our pursuit of our vision to create a banking group that Africa can truly be proud of,” Absa Chief Executive Maria Ramos said at an event in Johannesburg. “Our new brand is a celebration of our deep sense of pride in our African heritage.”

Absa was originally an acronym for Amalgamated Banks of South Africa. It was formed in 1991 through the merger of several South African banks including Volkskas Bank, a financial services conglomerate founded in the 1930s to mobilise the economic power of Afrikaners, white South Africans of mainly Dutch descent who ruled under apartheid.

Barclays bought a majority stake in Absa in 2005, but reduced its stake last year from 62 percent to 15 percent by selling shares to large investors, including South Africa’s Public Investment Corporation.

Alongside the rebranding, Absa CEO Ramos has drawn up an ambitious growth strategy to regain market share in retail banking at home and double the sales contribution from its 10 operations elsewhere in Africa.

The bank also previously announced plans to expand its corporate and investment banking unit with offices in New York and London.

Absa, which vies with Standard Bank, Nedbank and FirstRand, will rebrand its operations elsewhere in Africa over the next 12-18 months.

INDUSTRIES

ABOUT

FOLLOW US @BUSINESSNEWSCT

Deputy Minister Luwellyn Landers says South Africa thus continues to believe that multilateralism will continue to be a key aspect of international relations and that collective action is required to mitigate... https://t.co/uRu3AaSElD

It's a sunny weekend ahead and cooling off will be a necessity.💦We've compiled a few great beaches to visit with family and friends where you can catch up with the waters while enjoying some sun.🌞💃Have a look:

Cape Business News, founded in 1980, is a specialist online and print platform that provides business readers with comprehensive news, with extensive coverage of general business trends, events, statistics, new products, services and projects.